Tuesday, January 19, 2021

Mrs. Betty Bowers, America's Best Christian

 

vvv




Cori Bush: Can She Bring the Movement for Black Lives to Congress?

 

Teen Vogue profiles Cori Bush.
—Erika
On January 3, Cori Bush was sworn in as the first Black woman to represent Missouri in Congress. On January 6, thousands of white election deniers breached the U.S. Capitol building at the encouragement of President Donald Trump. As the mob, which included some police officers and military veterans, swarmed the building, Bush and her new colleagues were ushered away from the House floor, where they had convened to certify Joe Biden’s election as president, to shelter in place.
In her first full week on the job, Bush was already under siege. But she wasted no time. Her first act as a congresswoman was announcing a resolution to investigate and expel the Republican members of Congress who supported the attempts to overturn the election results. Since then, she’s been everywhere: coleading the resolution to impeach Trump (again), giving viral interviews about her GOP colleagues’ refusal to follow the same rules as everyone else (“Have they ever had a job before?”), and denouncing the “white supremacist insurrection” at the Capitol.
Bush’s first House floor speech, well, floored the public. “Madam Speaker, St. Louis and I rise in support of the article of impeachment against Donald J. Trump. If we fail to remove a white supremacist president who incited a white supremacist insurrection, it’s communities like Missouri’s First District that suffer the most. The 117th Congress must understand that we have a mandate to legislate in defense of Black lives. The first step in that process is to root out white supremacy, starting with impeaching the white supremacist in chief.” Republicans booed immediately. But Bush is not there for them; she is there to represent the district of the late Maya Angelou, the poet who penned, “Still I Rise."
“Where did you go to high school?”
When I begin recording my conversation with Cori Bush, this question sits in bold above my notes. The question is charming yet clichéd, but I’m supposed to ask because we are both from St. Louis. Our hometown is so segregated along race and class that based on her answer, I can guess whether she lived in the city or the county; if she woke up at 4:00 a.m. to catch a bus to a school an hour away as part of our court-ordered desegregation program; and most harrowing, her chances of being killed by a lover, neighbor, stranger, or a cop.
“I went to Cardinal Ritter,” Bush says. But I know that already because I cheated and checked her Facebook before I asked.
“Actually, that was the second school,” she continues. “My first semester of freshman year, I went to a predominantly white school. I was told that I was the number one ranked incoming freshman, and tested to that fact. [They] came to me and said, ‘Oh, you tested number one. We're going to have you retest because we don't believe that's your score. We think that you cheated.’ I think I was still 13 at the time. But I went back into this huge auditorium and retested and ended up scoring even higher. And so they said, ‘Okay, well we believe you now.’ But the way that I was treated when I entered the school, it was so bad I couldn't stay. And that's how I ended up at Cardinal Ritter.”
Cardinal Ritter is a predominantly Black Catholic school in the city of St. Louis. Bush grew up in Northwoods, a tiny, Ferguson-like municipality in St. Louis County. Bush recalls as a child witnessing police racially profile her friends and family, including her father, Errol Bush. He was the mayor of Northwoods in the ‘90s, and made the local paper for allegedly telling the police chief that the force had enough white cops and to hire Black cops who lived in the community. I wonder whether he believed that diversity would help avert the violent police encounters that contributed to his daughter’s prominent rise decades later, including her protests of the police killings of Michael Brown and Anthony Lamar Smith.
During our phone interview, aides interject with questions and Bush rushes around the Capitol preparing to cast votes. She sounds so in awe of her win that, in jest, I ask if she is still campaigning, still trying to convince me of her potential as a politician.
But her vigor and joy come from elsewhere. Bush, a pastor and nurse, shifts her tone to the gospel whisper I recognize from testimony time during church revivals and says, “I don't want anybody to have to feel hunger the way that I felt hunger. I don't want anybody else to have to live out of their vehicle with their babies.”
“Well, I won't even go into all of that," she continues. "They'll probably try to take me to jail. But my son was a baby [and] my daughter was a baby when we were living out of a car. Something happens to you when you feel like you can't provide for your kids, when you're cold and there's nothing, there's no amount of blankets you can put on yourself to be warm when you're sleeping in a car. You can't keep the car running because you're running down the gas. You can't keep the lights on [or] people know that you're in a car.”
I’ve slept in that cold too: the inwarmable bitter of homelessness. In St. Louis, Black people are almost four times as likely as white people to be unhoused; about 40,000 students in public schools in Missouri experience homelessness during one academic year.
But Bush’s plight didn’t stop there. She was almost killed by an abusive partner, involved in a serious car accident during her first congressional run, and was hospitalized after she likely contracted COVID-19 last year. Bush has overcome nearly impossible odds to secure her seat, which is not merely a story of individual triumph, but one that requires us to examine the social conditions that create those odds in the first place.









MASSterList: Higher priorities | Just in case | Tax lien racket: Today's sponsor - the American Heart Association

 


This email may be cut off by your email provider. To see today's full MASSterList, click "View entire message" at the bottom, or view the online version here.

By Jay Fitzgerald and Keith Regan

01/19/2021

Higher priorities | Just in case | Tax lien racket

 

Keller at Large

 
 
Lessons of the Trumpster fire
 

In his latest Keller at Large on MassterList, Jon Keller writes that Donald Trump's highly divisive and controversial presidency finally comes to a close in a day – and maybe it’s time everyone, including those in this bluest of blue state, consider how we got here and how we can move forward together, pro-Trumpsters and anti-Trumpsters alike.


Keller at Large
 
 
Happening Today
 
Restaurant support and police reforms
 

-- Restaurant workers and Juliet co-owner Joshua Lewin hold pre-inauguration event to show support for the incoming Biden administration's proposed relief package that would provide support to restaurants, end the subminimum , wage and lift the minimum wage to $15 per hour, 21 Union Square, Somerville11 a.m.

-- Massachusetts Women's Political Caucus holds its annual meeting via Zoom, with featured speaker LaTosha Brown, the cofounder of Black Voters Matter, 6 p.m.

-- JP Progressives holds a virtual forum to discuss the debate around police reform efforts, with panelists including Sen. Sonia Chang-Diaz, Fatema Ahmad of Muslim Justice League, Rahsaan Hall of the ACLU, and Carl Williams, a movement lawyer, 7 p.m.

For the most comprehensive list of calendar items, check out State House News Service’s Daily Advances (pay wall – free trial subscriptions available), as well as MassterList’s Beacon Hill Town Square below.

 
 
Keller at Large Jan 19
 
 
Today's News
 
Reminder to readers: SHNS Coronavirus Tracker available for free
 

A reminder to our readers as the coronavirus crisis unfolds: The paywalled State House News Service, which produces MASSterList, is making its full Coronavirus Tracker available to the community for free on a daily basis each morning via ML. SHNS Coronavirus Tracker.

 
 
The coronavirus numbers: 52 new deaths, 13,424 total deaths, 13,424 new cases
 

NECN has the latest coronavirus numbers for Massachusetts.

 
 
In case you missed us yesterday …
 

Check your inboxes from yesterday. MassterList did indeed publish over the holiday, covering subjects such as Gov. Charlie Baker’s vetoing key items in the transportation bill, pre-inauguration security measures at the State House, Suffolk DA Rachael Rollins on the U.S. attorney finalist list and more.

 
 
American Heart Association
 
 
Just a precaution: National Guard troops bolster police as Biden inauguration nears
 

State officials stress there are no specific local threats of violence ahead of tomorrow’s presidential inauguration of Joe Biden – but, as a precaution, Mass. National Guard troops are now on standby to help the BPD and State Police if troubles arise in Boston, WCVB reports.

WCVB
 
 
Biden’s choice to head SEC gets big thumbs up from Warren
 

Speaking of tomorrow’s presidential inauguration, the folks on Wall Street and the mutual-fund types in Boston may not be happy about this. But U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren is thrilled with President-elect Joe Biden’s pick of Gary Gensler to head the Securities and Exchange Commission, CNN reports. Meanwhile, private equity folks in Boston should be nervous as well. Warren has them in her regulatory sights too, Politico’s Zachary Warmbrodt reports.

CNN
 
 
Good riddance or thank you, President Trump?
 

We’re still a two newspaper town in Boston, as evidenced this morning by two prominent pundits’ polar-opposite takes on the end of the Trump presidency. The Herald’s Howie Carr has a wet-kiss “Thanks for everything, Mr. President” column while the Globe’s Joan Vennochi wonders whether Joe Biden can ever “contain the flames lit by Trump.”

 
 

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Learn how a sugary drink tax would improve the health of Massachusetts.
 
 
One of Walsh’s main challenges as labor secretary: ‘It’s not FDR time’
 

As Joe Biden’s future labor secretary, Marty Walsh will be facing a host of public-policy challenges, among them reversing many of the Trump administration’s pro-employer policies. But there’s also the problem of Democrats holding only a slim majority in Congress. Meaning: “It’s not FDR time.” The Globe’s Katie Johnston explains.

Boston Globe
 
 
Teachers, Blacks and others to state: Time to rearrange vaccination priority list
 

Switching to the pandemic, CommonWealth’s Sarah Betancourt reports that K-12 educators are pushing for teachers to be moved up on the state’s vaccination priority list, arguing that vaccinating teachers will speed up a return to in-person classes. Meanwhile, the Globe’s Hanna Krueger reports that hundreds of medical professionals are urging the Baker administration to start prioritizing Blacks, immigrants and others living in officially designated community hotspots for vaccinations. And the Herald has its own higher-priority suggestion: Food-supply workers.

It’s not as if the administration hasn’t re-arranged the vaccination priority list in the past, as GBH’s Craig LeMoult reported earlier this week regarding visiting nurses.

 
 
State now tracking coronavirus among ‘commercial sex workers’
 

How did we ever miss this story from the other day? The Herald’s Joe Dwinell reports that the state, in its daily coronavirus testing report, is now counting COVID-19 cases among “commercial sex workers,” a potential “superspreader” category of workers.

Boston Herald
 
 
Dark Wire
 
 
MLK celebrations from around the state …
 

There were almost countless holiday events, speeches and words written yesterday about Martin Luther King Jr. and his legacy. Here’s a sampling of MLK Day stories from around the state, starting with a WBUR: “'Stop Being Silent': On MLK Day, Boston Rallies Call For Racial Justice And Police Accountability.” ... From MassLive: “‘What are you doing for others?’: Springfield celebrates legacy of slain civil rights icon Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.” ... From the Enterprise: “Brockton-area MLK celebrations go virtual.” ...From WCVB: “Hundreds of Mass. students honor MLK with service to community.” ... From the Telegram: “After turbulent year, call for rest, reflection at MLK breakfast.” ... From the Berkshire Eagle: “MLK Day may look different in a pandemic, but passion and service remain.”

 
 
MLK Jr.’s timeless thoughts on education
 

We thought our readers, many of whom work in education, would appreciate a piece in the Washington Post yesterday on Martin Luther King Jr.’s views on the importance of education in America. The first excerpt, written when King was still in college, shows his mind worked at a completely different level even when he was young. More than 70 years later, his elegant words remain applicable to our times.

Washington Post
 
 
The municipal tax-lien racket: Legal larceny?
 

The Globe’s Sean Murphy has a pretty amazing story about how Massachusetts is one of only about a dozen states that allow private companies to take over municipal tax liens and then seek foreclosure – and potentially huge profits – against those who haven’t kept up with their property-tax payments.

This sounds like something property-rights conservatives and help-the-little-guy progressives should be all over. It’s literally a public-private sectors racket. There are other (and more fair) ways for towns to collect unpaid tax bills.

Boston Globe
 
 

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Dark Wire will bring you information and coverage you will not get anywhere else.
 
 
State pardon board recommends a murderer’s sentence be commuted
 

Not one commutation recommendation in six years? Anyway, from the Globe’s Shelley Murphy: “For the first time in six years, the state Advisory Board of Pardons is urging Governor Charlie Baker to commute a convicted murderer’s life sentence after unanimously concluding that Thomas E. Koonce deserves his freedom after spending 28 years in prison for the 1987 slaying of a New Bedford man.”

 
 
Is it asking too much for a little more transparency on Beacon Hill?
 

In an editorial, the Globe is backing the push by the progressive Act on Mass for more legislative transparency on Beacon Hill, a subject CommonWealth’s Shira Schoenberg was writing about last week.

 
 
A top priority for new Cannabis Commission: Press lawmakers for more diverse pot industry
 

Speaking of the legislature, the BBJ’s Jessica Bartlett reports that the Cannabis Control Commission, with three new members, is gearing up for a legislative push on Beacon Hill for policies that would make it easier for minorities to get a piece of the legalized marijuana market in Massachusetts.

BBJ
 
 
K@L Jan 11
 
 
UMass’s exclusive million-dollar club
 

The Herald has already taken its whack at the state’s 2020 payroll data. This morning it’s the Globe’s highest-state-earners turn – and it never ceases to amaze how much UMass administrators are paid, with two of them now topping $1 million a year.

 
 
Dead skunk found in Weston activist’s mailbox
 

This clearly stinks. From Nick Soico at the Globe: “A Democratic activist from Weston says her 22-year-old daughter found a dead skunk inside their mailbox Saturday morning, and she doesn’t believe the critter climbed in on its own. Mary Ellen Sikes, a former candidate for the town’s select board and an outspoken activist, said she believes somebody placed the deceased animal inside her family’s mailbox out of political retaliation.”

Boston Globe
 
 
TCI opponents push other states to nix Baker-backed carbon tax
 

Citizens for Limited Taxation is back. And the old anti-tax group founded by the late Barbara Anderson is trying to counter Gov. Charlie Baker’s embrace of the Transportation Climate Initiative by appealing to other states not to go along with the carbon-tax idea, reports the Herald’s Erin Tiernan.

Boston Herald
 
 
SHNS Trial
 
 
Mail it in: Rausch bill would make vote-by-mail a permanent option
 

The numbers don’t lie. Citing the record turnout in the November election, state Sen. Becca Rausch has filed legislation to make voting by mail a permanent option in Bay State elections, George Rhodes at the Sun Chronicle reports. The state’s GOP party chair is already signaling opposition. 

Sun Chronicle
 
 
Scrubbed: Advocates hail police reform provision allowing record expungement
 

It’s a mixed bag. Justice advocates are hailing a provision of the recently passed police reform law that allows people with criminal backgrounds to have multiple charges scrubbed from their records, but say the bar to qualify for expungement remains high, Christian Wade at the Eagle-Tribune reports. 

Eagle Tribune
 
 
Still painful: South Shore towns keeping close eye on T cuts
 

Leaders of South Shore cities and towns say they are relieved the MBTA has backed off some of its most drastic service-reduction plans. But they’re not totally relieved. Joe DiFazio at the Patriot Ledger has the details. 

Patriot Ledger
 
 
Advertise
 
 
Today's Headlines
 
Metro
 

Count Them Out: Here’s Who Isn’t Running for Mayor of Boston - Boston Magazine

Framingham Teen Charged With Damaging Boston Police Cruiser Arrested At New York Airport - WBUR

 
Massachusetts
 

West Springfield Mayor William Reichelt declares racism a ‘health crisis;’ plans equity committee - MassLive

‘Surreal:' Rep. Jim McGovern reflects on past couple weeks, path forward - Telegram & Gazette

Inspector General raises new questions about Hingham Housing Authority payments - Boston Globe

 
Nation
 

Biden to cancel Keystone XL pipeline in inaugural day action - New York Times

Washington state announces partnership with companies including Starbucks and Microsoft to boost vaccinations - CNN

 
Reportal Jan 18
 
 
Jobs
 

Reach MASSterList's 22,000 Beacon Hill connected and policy-minded subscribers with your job postings. Have friends interested in one of these positions? Forward the newsletter to them! Contact David Art at dart@massterlist.com or call 860-576-1886 for more information.

 
Recent postings to the MASSterList Job Board:
 

Director of Programs - new!, The Rennie Center for Education Research & Policy

Deputy Director - new!, Local Initiatives Support Corporation

Data Strategist, Boston Region Metropolitan Planning Organization Central Transportation Planning Staff

Executive Director, The Massachusetts Association of Community Colleges (MACC)

State Contracting Policy Analysis Consultant, The Collaborative

UTEC Policy Director, UTEC

AIM Engagement Director- Central/Western MA, Associated Industries of Massachusetts

Legislative Liaison, Department of Family and Medical Leave

Director of Communications, Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition (MIRA)

Workforce Development Director, The Massachusetts Association of Community Colleges (MACC)

Deputy Political Director, SEIU Local 509

Executive Director, Asian American Commission (AAC)

 

To view more events or post an event listing on Beacon Hill Town Square, please visit events.massterlist.com.

Beacon Hill Town Square
 
Jan. 19, 1 p.m.
Mindful Tuesdays
Hosted by: The ROAR Webinar Series with Josefina Bonilla
 
The ROAR Daily Webinar Series is inspirational and aspirational. Join industry Leaders as we discuss Innovation & Leadership, Diversity, Inclusion & Equity, Corporate Social Responsibility & The Community, and the definition of success and the emergency of new leadership styles and techniques to stay connected, healthy and happy. All Webinars are complimentary. More Information

 
 
Jan. 20, 6 p.m.
Lost Wonderland: The Brief and Brilliant Life of Boston's Million Dollar Amusement Park
Hosted by: Boston Public Library
 
Stephen R. Wilk, author of Lost Wonderland, will discuss the story of Wonderland's creation and wild, but brief success which is full of larger-than-life characters who hoped to thrill attendees and rake in profits. More Information

 
 
Jan. 21, 8:30 a.m.
2021 Economic Outlook
Hosted by: Boston Business Journal and CIBC Commercial Banking
 
Join the Boston Business Journal and CIBC for an expert look at the latest information concerning global, national and regional trends impacting the economy. The 2021 Economic Outlook will offer unique access to economic insights from world-class experts and professionals to help translate economic trends into competitive intelligence to grow your business and find opportunity in the coming year. More Information

 
 
Jan. 21, 1:30 p.m.
Live Chat with Google Product Manager
Hosted by: Product School
 
Join in and get all your product questions answered during our online event with Neil Joglekar, Product Manager at Google. He is a product manager at Google where he leads teams to improve consumer experience. He is also a YC founder. More Information

 
 
Jan. 21, 6 p.m.
Alex Zamalin - Against Civility: The Hidden Racism in Our Obsession with Civility
Hosted by: Boston Public Library
 
Join the Boston Public Library in partnership with the Museum of American History for an online conversation with author Alex Zamalin moderated by MAAH Direcror of Education and Interpretation L'Merchie Frazier. This program is part of the BPL's Repairing America Series. More Information

 
 
Jan. 25, 12 p.m.
Light, Land, and Water; Native and non-Native Visions of New England
Hosted by: The Courtauld Research Forum
 
This lecture will attempt to honor diverse definitions of :landscape" by examining Wabanaki baskets and beadwork alongside canvases by New England painters such as Fitz Henry Lane and Martin Johnson Heade, It will raise questions about depictions (or embodiments) of natural resources, relationships between humans, and the environment and entanglements of Native non-Native histories. More Information

 
 
Jan. 25, 6 p.m.
Human Trafficking 101
Hosted by: The Key2Free
 
The Key2Free is committed to education and increased awareness with the goal of preventing trafficking before it starts. Across all states, victims of sex trafficking are enslaved every day through force, fraud, or coercion. Together, we can call attention to and fight the shocking realities of the injustice happening right here in our communities. More Information

 
 
Jan. 27, 12 p.m.
Malcolm Gladwell and the New Normal after COVID-19
Hosted by: Arent Fox LLP
 
Join Arent Fox for a one hour virtual event with Malcolm Gladwell, the celebrated journalist and best-selling author of Tipping Point, Outliers, and Talking to Strangers, who will talk about life after COVID-19. There will also be a Q&A with Arent Fox Partner Anthony V. Lupo.Malcolm Gladwell and the New Normal after COVID-19 JAN 27 2021 12:00 PM Hosted by: Arent Fox LLP Online Event www.eventbrite.com/e/malcolm-gladwell-and-the-new-normal-after-covid-19-tickets-132113604347?aff=ebdssbonlinesearch Join Arent Fox for a one hour virtual event with Malcolm Gladwell, the celebrated journalist and best-selling author of Tipping Point, Outliers, and Talking to Strangers, who will talk about life after COVID-19. There will also be a Q&A with Arent Fox Partner Anthony V. Lupo. More Information

 
 
Jan. 28, 2 p.m.
lo T in Sports: Changing the Game
Hosted by: Verizon
 
Join us as we hear from industry experts about the integration of lo T in the world of live sports, how major leagues like the NFL are utilizing wearable technology and connected devices, what features fans can expect from stadiums as they become more connected, and how 5G & MEC are changing the game for years to come. More Information
k
 
 
Jan. 28, 6 p.m.
Dr. Maya Rockeymoore Cummings & James Dale - "We're Better Than This"
Hosted by: Boston Public Library
 
Join the Boston Public Library for an online talk with distinguished political expert, Dr. Maya Rockeymoore Cummings and longtime non-fiction writer James Dale, co-authors of We're Better Than This: My Fight for the Future of our Democracy, primarily authored by the late Elijah Cummings. More Information

 
 
Jan. 28, 6 p.m.
Community Read Book Group: An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States
Hosted by: Boston Public Library
 
Let's read together! Join your friends, family and fellow Yearlong Reading Challenge participants at the Boston Public Library as we discuss the January Community Read for adults: An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz. The discussion will be moderated by a librarian and will take place on Zoom. More Information
 
 
Jan. 29, 12 p.m.
Global Mobility and the Threat of Pandemics: Evidence from Three Centuries
Hosted by: Harvard Kennedy School
 
Researchers at the Center for Global Development test predictions across four global pandemics in three different centuries: the influenza pandemics that began in 1889, 1918, 1957, and 2009. They find that in all cases, even a draconian 50 percent reduction in pre-pandemic international mobility is associated with 1-2 weeks later arrival and no detectable reduction in final mortality. More Information

 
 
Feb. 1, 12 p.m.
Human Rights and the Future World Order
Hosted by: Harvard Kennedy School and Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs
 
Speakers include Hina Jilanni, former United Nations Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Human Rights Defenders; Samuel Moyn, Henry R. Luce Professor of Jurisprudence, Yale Law School and Professor of History, Yale University; Zeid Ra'ad, Perry World House Professor of the Practice of Law and Human Rights, University of Pennsylvania. More Information

 
Feb. 2, 2 p.m.
Social Media for Government Agencies and the Public Sector: Everything You Need to Know but are Afraid to Ask, a Digital CP
Hosted by: Harvard Kennedy School
 
Come learn the basics of the Social Media platforms and how you can use them effectively to achieve your goals. Whether you're a Tik Tok influencer or just learned that the symbol # isn't a "pound sign". This workshop is open to all levels. More Information
 
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